PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Let's get moving: Unraveling how locomotion starts

2012-05-17
(Press-News.org) While experiments in the 1970s using electrical brain stimulation identified areas of the brain responsible for starting locomotion, the precise neuron-by-neuron pathway has not been described in any vertebrate – until now.

To find this pathway, Dr Edgar Buhl and colleagues in Bristol's School of Biological Sciences studied a small, simple vertebrate: the Xenopus frog tadpole.

They found that the pathway to initiate swimming consists of just four types of neurons. By touching skin on the head of the tadpole and applying cellular neurophysiology and anatomy techniques, the scientists identified nerve cells that detect the touch on the skin, two types of brain nerve cells which pass on the signal, and the motor nerve cells that control the swimming muscles.

Dr Buhl said: "These findings address the longstanding question of how locomotion is initiated following sensory stimulation and, for the first time in any vertebrate, define in detail a direct pathway responsible. They could thus be of great evolutionary interest and could also open the path to understanding initiation of locomotion in other vertebrates."

When mechanisms in the brain that initiate locomotion break down – for example, in people with Parkinson's disease – starting to walk becomes a real problem. Therefore, understanding the initiation of swimming in tadpoles could be a first step towards understanding the initiation of locomotion in more complex vertebrates, including people, and may eventually have implications for treating movement disorders such as Parkinson's.

The research is published today in the Journal of Physiology.

###

Notes to editors

Paper

'The role of a trigeminal sensory nucleus in the initiation of locomotion' by Edgar Buhl, Alan Roberts and Stephen R. Soffe in the Journal of Physiology

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How blind can 'read' shown in Hebrew University research

How blind can read shown in Hebrew University research
2012-05-17
Jerusalem, May 16, 2012 – A method developed at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem for training blind persons to "see" through the use of a sensory substitution device (SSD) has enabled those using the system to actually "read" an eye chart with letter sizes smaller than those used in determining the international standard for blindness. The eight congenitally blind participants in the Hebrew University test group passed the conventional eye-exam of the Snellen acuity test, technically surpassing the world-agreed criterion of the World Health Organization (WHO) for ...

Attorneys' Group Concerned Chapter 11 Can't Handle Modern Debts

2012-05-17
Chapter 11 bankruptcy is designed to offer relief to business corporations and partnerships that have become overwhelmed by debt. In some cases, Chapter 11 bankruptcy can also be helpful to high-income individuals who do not qualify for relief under Chapter 7 or Chapter 13. Chapter 11 was developed more than 30 years ago as a way for filers to reorganize their financial affairs and pay creditors back over time. Recently, though, a number of prominent bankruptcy lawyers have begun to voice concerns that the current Chapter 11 system may not be well-suited to the realities ...

Make or break for cellular tissues

2012-05-17
In a study about to be published in EPJ E¹, French physicists from the Curie Institute in Paris have demonstrated that the behaviour of a thin layer of cells in contact with an unfavourable substrate is akin to that of thin fluid or elastic films. Understanding the mechanism by which a thin layer of cells splits into disjointed patches, thus breaking the layer's structural integrity, bears great significance because the human tissue, or epithelium, covering organs can only fulfil its role if there are no holes or gaps between the cells. Thanks to the analogy between the ...

FMCSA Provides Glimpse of What Trucker Sleep Apnea Regulations May Look Like

2012-05-17
In what the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) refers to as a "clerical error," the notice of proposed rules concerning sleep apnea of truck drivers was released and withdrawn on the same day in April. The request for public comments details some of the factors the FMCSA may consider for a final rulemaking on the issue of drivers who suffer from obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Obstructive Sleep Apnea Sleep apnea is a respiratory dysfunction where breathing temporarily stops, interfering with the exchange of oxygen in the lungs. The Mayo ...

Nature: Microscope looks into cells of living fish

Nature: Microscope looks into cells of living fish
2012-05-17
Microscopes provide valuable insights in the structure and dynamics of cells, in particular when the latter remain in their natural environment. However, this is very difficult especially for higher organisms. Researchers of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Mainz, and the American National Institutes of Health (NIH) have now developed a new method to visualize cell structures of an eighth of a micrometer in size in living fish larvae. It is published in the Nature Methods magazine (DOI:10.1038/nmeth.2025). "The zebrafish ...

Hide and Seek? Finding Assets in a Divorce

2012-05-17
A marriage is a partnership; when it ends, both partners should be entitled to a fair share of the financial fruits it bore. Even so, sometimes one spouse attempts to hide assets in an effort to prevent them from being equitably distributed. Concealing assets during a divorce is not only wrong, it's illegal. But, with help from a qualified divorce attorney and a little knowhow, you can prevent your soon-to-be ex from pulling a fast one. Common Vehicles of Deception Unfortunately, hiding assets is not as difficult as you may think. Financial folios for most couples ...

Cyber partners help you go the distance

2012-05-17
A new study, testing the benefits of a virtual exercise partner, shows that the presence of a moderately more capable cycling partner boosts motivation to stick to an exercise program. The work by Brandon Irwin and colleagues, from Michigan State University in the US, is published online in Springer's journal, Annals of Behavioral Medicine. For many people, lack of motivation is a barrier to achieving both the recommended amount and intensity of exercise. Using the principles of group exercise, which is known to increase people's motivation to stick to an exercise program, ...

Student Loans Burying Senior Citizens: Will a Bankruptcy Law Change Help?

2012-05-17
According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, approximately 37 million Americans have student loan debt, creating a student debt load of $870 billion. The research revealed that student loans are not just for young adults. People age 60 and older still owe $36 billion of their own student loan debts and they are delinquent on more than $3.6 billion of that amount. There are two main types of student loans: private and government-backed. Bankruptcy laws have changed over the years regarding treatment of these two types of student loans: - Prior to 1976, all student ...

Astronomers discovered ancient Egyptian observations of a variable star

2012-05-17
The study of the "Demon star", Algol, made by a research group of the University of Helsinki, Finland, has received both scientific and public attention. The period of the brightness variation of this eclipsing binary star has been connected to good prognoses three millennia ago. This result has raised a lot of discussion and the news has spread widely in the Internet. The Egyptian papyrus Cairo 86637 calendar is probably the oldest preserved historical document of bare eye observations of a variable star. Each day of one Egyptian year was divided into three parts in ...

Peers Recognize Spangenberg Shibley & Liber LLP Lawyers

2012-05-17
Cleveland-based Spangenberg Shibley & Liber LLP is proud to announce that several of its attorneys have recently been listed in Best Lawyers - a respected legal peer-review publication. Among the accolades, managing partner Peter H. Weinberger was voted Best Lawyers' Cleveland Medical Malpractice Law Plaintiff's Lawyer of the Year. Partner Dennis R. Lansdowne was selected as Best Lawyers' Cleveland Personal Injury Litigation Lawyer of the Year. And Messrs. Weinberger and Lansdowne merited mention on The Best Lawyers in America list, along with Spangenberg Shibley ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New motion-compensation approach delivers sharper single-pixel imaging for dynamic scenes

Journal of Psychiatry and Neuroscience now officially part of the Canadian Science Publishing portfolio

What motivates runners? Focusing on the “how” rather than the “why”

Researchers capture new antibiotic resistance mechanisms with trace amounts of DNA

New research in JNCCN offers a simplified way to identify harmful medications in older adults with cancer

State school finance reforms increased racial and ethnic funding inequities, new study finds

Endocrine Society honors endocrinology field’s leaders with 2026 Laureate Awards    

Decoding high-grade endometrial cancer: a molecular-histologic integration using the Cancer Genome Atlas framework

An exploding black hole could reveal the foundations of the universe

Childhood traumatic events and transgender identity are strongly associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviors in university students

UVA to test if MRI can reveal undetected brain injuries in soldiers

Mount Sinai Morningside unveils new, state-of-the-art facility for patients who need inpatient rehabilitation

BD² announces new funding opportunities focused on biology of bipolar disorder

“Want to, but can’t”: A new model to explain the gap in waste separation behavior

Highly sensitive, next-generation wearable pressure sensors inspired by cat whiskers

Breaking the code of sperm motion: Two proteins found to be vital for male fertility

UC Irvine poll: Californians support stricter tech regulations for children

Study finds critically endangered sharks being sold as food in U.S. grocery stores

Meat from critically endangered sharks is commonly sold under false labels in the US

‘Capture strategies’ are harming efforts to save our planet warns scientists

Misconceptions keep some cancer patient populations from benefitting from hormone therapy

Predicting the green glow of aurorae on the red planet

Giant DNA discovered hiding in your mouth

Children lose muscle during early cancer treatment — new ECU study warns of a hidden danger to recovery 

World-first koala chlamydia vaccine approved

Taking the pulse of digital health in Asia

Even healthy children can be severely affected by RSV

Keto diet linked to reduced depression symptoms in college students

Blood test identifies HPV-associated head and neck cancers up to 10 years before symptoms

Odds of dementia strongly linked to number of co-existing mental health disorders

[Press-News.org] Let's get moving: Unraveling how locomotion starts